Scottish Daily Mail

£100bn wiped off Amazon as shares tumble

- By Luke Barr and Calum Muirhead

More than £100bn was wiped off the value of Amazon last night as customers cut back spending in light of a cost of living crisis.

After another update that rocked Big Tech in the US, shares in the online giant fell 10pc after it posted disappoint­ing quarterly results.

The slump shaved £113bn off the value of the company - and saw the near-10pc stake held by founder Jeff Bezos (pictured with partner Lauren Sanchez) fall by more than £10bn.

Apple shares were also under pressure despite it posting a record set of second-quarter results. The group reported revenues for its second quarter of £78bn, up 8.6pc yearon-year and higher than analyst prediction­s of around £75bn. Profits for the period were £20bn, ahead of market expectatio­ns of £19bn.

The sell-off at Amazon came after it said sales between April and June would be well below expectatio­ns.

The online retailer had been expected to report sales of £100bn over the three month period. But it last night warned revenues would come in between £93bn and £97bn.

In a further blow, income in the first three months of the year fell to £3bn, down from £7.1bn in the same period 12 months ago.

The slide in profits came as the easing of Covid restrictio­ns dented demand for online shopping.

Companies have also suffered supply chain disruption and soaring costs including wages.

Amazon chief executive Andy Jassy said the ‘pandemic and subsequent war in Ukraine have brought unusual growth and challenges’ for the firm.

However, he said the firm is focused on improving productivi­ty and cost efficiency now that it is ‘no longer chasing physical or staffing capacity’.

Jassy also highlighte­d the continued growth of Amazon Web Services, the company’s cloud computing business, which rose 37pc year-on-year for the first quarter. Amazon became the first major tech group to post a profit of more than £100bn in February. The slump in the Amazon share price followed a rollercoas­ter few weeks for US tech stocks – and British savers exposed to the sector through investment­s in funds that hold the shares such as Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust and Baillie gifford American. netflix shares tumbled 35pc in a single day last week after it revealed paying subscriber­s were leaving in their droves. And shares in Tesla tumbled this week after boss elon Musk agreed a £35bn takeover of Twitter.

But in a much-needed bright spot, shares in Facebook owner

Meta soared yesterday after results from the social media giant were better than feared.

The stock jumped 17.5pc to $205.73 on Wall Street in one of its best days in years.

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